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St John's, Ashfield

St John the Baptist Anglican Church is an active Anglican church located between Alt and Bland Streets, Ashfield, a suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Founded in 1840, on land donated by Elizabeth Underwood, the church building is the oldest authenticated surviving building in Ashfield, having been built at the time when subdivision increased the population density sufficiently to turn Ashfield into a town.[3] It was also the first church built along the Parramatta Road which linked the early colonial towns of Sydney and Parramatta.[4] The earliest remaining parts of the building are one of the first Sydney designs by the colonial architect Edmund Blacket, who later became renowned for his ecclesiastical architecture.[1]: p. 51 

St John's, Ashfield
St John the Baptist Anglican Church
The northern side of the church building. The central rendered section (nave) is the original church building. The sandstone section on the left (transept and chancel) was completed in 1875. The tower on the right was added in 1901.
St John's, Ashfield
Location in Greater Sydney
33°52′54″S 151°07′40″E / 33.8817°S 151.1278°E / -33.8817; 151.1278
LocationAlt and Bland Streets, Ashfield, Sydney, New South Wales
CountryAustralia
DenominationAnglican Church of Australia
Websitewww.cciw.church/ashfield
History
StatusChurch
Founded9 September 1840 (1840-09-09)
Founder(s)Joseph Kidd Walpole
Consecrated19 August 1845 (1845-08-19)
Associated peopleWilliam George Hilliard (rector who later became the Bishop of Nelson.)
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Heritage designationLocal Government
Designated20 December 1985
Architect(s)Edmund Blacket
Years built1841-45
Administration
DioceseSydney
ArchdeaconrySouth Sydney Region
DeaneryChrist Church Inner West
Clergy
RectorAndrew Katay (since 2005)
A map of the St John's site. Charlotte and Julia streets are named after two of the daughters of Elizabeth Underwood, who donated the first land to build the church. Julia's husband also became the fourth rector.[1]: p. 51  Bland street is named after another of the early benefactors, William Bland.[2]

The expansive church grounds contain a cemetery dating back to 1845 that contains the remains of many notable Ashfield residents. Australia's only memorial to Australian Air Force Cadets occupies a prominent position near the entrance to the church. The St John's site has been listed on the Local Environment Plan Heritage Schedule, and the Register of the National Trust of Australia.[5]

St John's is one of three churches, along with St Albans, Five Dock, and St Oswald's, Haberfield, which make up Christ Church Inner West, operating within the parish of Ashfield, Five Dock, and Haberfield, as part of the South Sydney Region of the Anglican Diocese of Sydney. The church has had 18 rectors, including William George Hilliard who later became the Bishop of Nelson. Andrew Katay has been rector since early 2005.[6]

History edit

St John's was the first church to be established along Parramatta Road between the colonial towns of Sydney and Parramatta (then known as Rose Hill),[4] during a time of rapid church building when many of the oldest churches in Sydney were erected.[7] Since 1810 the Parish of Ashfield had extended from Balmain to Strathfield, and from Enfield to the Parramatta River, and in 1840 this was formalized into an ecclesiastical district.[8]: p. 5 [9]

Early contributors edit

 
Elizabeth Underwood
 
William Bland

The first portion of grounds, an area of 1 acre, 2 roods, and 36 perches (a total of 0.698 ha),[1]: p. 49  was provided as a gift by the local landowner Elizabeth Underwood who was subdividing "Ashfield Park".[10][11] The Bishop of Australia, William Grant Broughton added urgency by expressing his "intention of having a Place of Worship erected immediately, on the allotment of land appropriated for that purpose".[12][13]: p. 21  Another benefactor was William Bland, a doctor and politician who had been sent to the colony having been convicted of manslaughter after pistol duel which left his opponent mortally wounded,[14] and after whom Bland street is named.[2] He gave a donation of £200[15] and land.[14] Fellow local medical practitioner, James Bowman, contributed a "similarly munificent donation".[15] By mid-1839 the funds received were thought to be sufficient to commence building.[7]: p. 2  The exact location was determined in February 1840, and appeals continued to fund a building of sufficient size for the surrounding population.[16]

Church building edit

 
A stained glass panel in the chancel, unveiled in 1934, illustrating Jesus' words "I am the Resurrection and the Life" (John 11:25)[17]

The church was founded on 9 September 1840.[11] The service on that day was read by the first rector, Joseph Kidd Walpole, who had come to the district from Christ Church, Kelso, and had begun to plan the church building.[18]: p. 10  W. G. Broughton made an address at the ceremony.[11] The anniversary sermon was preached by Robert Allwood.[19]

This Foundation Stone of a church dedicated to the honor and worship of Almighty God! and to be denominated 'The Church of St. John the Baptist' was laid the 9th day of September, 1840. By the Right Reverend Father in God William Lord Bishop of Australia in the Fourth Year of the reign of Queen Victoria. Sir George Gipps, Knight. Governor. Rev. Joseph Kidd Walpole, Minister. Among those that are born of women there is not a greater Prophet than John the Baptist; but he that is last in the Kingdom of God is greater than he. Luke vii, 28.

— Plaque inside the foundation stone, location unknown.[4][20]
 
The original church building, measuring 61 feet (19 m) by 31 feet (9.4 m).[1]: p. 51 

Building work on the church began in 1841, but construction came to a standstill due to construction problems and insufficient subscriptions.[1]: p. 49 [21] The following year the colonial architect Edmund Blacket, as one of his first assignments after arriving in Sydney, was requested to inspect the church's walls, then still under construction. As a result of his report, the walls were demolished and re-erected,[1]: p. 50  although continued funding problems, and the transfer of J. K. Walpole to Windsor[22] caused further delays.[23] The church was licensed for operation on 1 October 1843.[13]: p. 115  Much of the interior woodwork was carved by the third rector, Frederick Wilkinson.[24] The roof was strengthened in around 1845 by the installation of timber support columns.[5] On 16 August 1845, at a cost of £100 the church purchased an additional 2.5 acres (1.0 ha) of land from Elizabeth Underwood (who remained a parishioner until her death, and is buried in a prominent grave within the church cemetery).[1]: p. 51 [8]: p. 6  The church was eventually consecrated on 19 August 1845.[24]

 
The exterior after the 1875 additions[1]: p. 93 
 
The crossing and chancel as it appeared in 1883

After 29 years, as the Bishop of Sydney Frederic Barker put it "the population of Sydney had invaded these sylvan shades",[25] so an expansion was required. Blacket designed the current stone transept and chancel, to transform the church into a cruciform plan. These were built during the period 1874–1875[1]: p. 93  at a cost of around £150 – raised without the help of grants from the government or the English societies.[25] The foundation stone of the addition was laid by Barker on 24 October 1874, and included a copy of Australian Churchman and The Sydney Morning Herald. At the time this addition accommodated an extra 250 seats, bringing the total capacity to 446.[25]

Construction of the choir vestry and a wooden porch outside the western door were completed in 1885, and dedicated by Bishop Alfred Barry.[8]: p. 9  This work was overseen by the Blacket brothers,[5] who had followed the trade of their late father.

Arthur Blacket then designed the west tower.[5] The eight-bell peal was ordered from England after a generous bequest by one of the "Melanesian boys", David Marguay, and subsequent fundraising.[26] The tower was then quickly constructed at a cost of around £250 in memory of the recently deceased rector James Christian Corlette,[27] and dedicated as The Corlette Memorial Tower on 1 November 1901.[26] The memorial bells proved depressing amongst the local populace,[1]: p. 150  and were rearranged in 1904, with louvres added to the previously open arches.[28] This was apparently ineffective, as the bells were removed within a few years.[1]: p. 150 

Music edit

 
The 1883 Hill and Son pipe organ, located in the north-eastern corner of the transept

Prior to the installation of a pipe organ, a seraphine and then a harmonium were used for musical accompaniment. The first organ was installed above the gallery at the western end of the church by William Davidson at the request of the rector J. C. Corlette, and was transferred to the south transept in about 1879, where it remained until 1882 when it was sold to St Bartholomew's, Pyrmont, and later St Luke's, Northmead.[8]: p. 8 [29]

The 1883 Hill and Son organ, including 844 pipes, costing a total of £550, was installed in 1884,[30][31] and located in the north-east corner of the transept.[8]: p. 8  It is still in use, with original pipework, making it faithful to the original tones. The organ was refurbished and rebuilt in 1950, 1975, and 2008.[29][32]

The 1950 change from mechanical to electrical action was motivated by removing the increasingly noisy pedals and trackers. This refurbishment also included detachment of the console (to the other side of the transept), and replacement of the bellows with a "pressure equaliser".[33] The façade pipes were sprayed to a dull gold colour, covering over the original diapering, described disparagingly at the time as "all over the pipes without much rhyme or reason; fleurs-de-lys in profusion, dots, bands, triangles in all the colours of the rainbow rioted in confusion".[33] This work was carried out by R. A. and D. A. Wiltshire.[29][33]

By 1975 the organ had become unplayable, and a reconversion to mechanical action was undertaken. The console was moved back to the organ side of the transept, with the action going backward under the floor into the organ. This necessitated removal of floor joists and foundation piers, but the unsupported floor caused further problems long term, and during the 2008 rebuild it was re-electrified.[29]

Between 2006 and 2008 Sydney firm "John W Parker – Pipe Organ Builders" refurbished the organ, returning the soundboard action to electric, providing a new roll-top 'detached' console, and an entirely new wind supply and bellows. The swell box which had been discarded in the 1975 rebuild was reinstated, and the pedal Bourdon 16' stop was extended to 8' pitch. Octave couplers were provided in Sub and Octave pitches on the Swell also. All manual pipework was washed, cleaned and regulated to original Hill standards and tonality.

The church had a significant choral history, with significant events often celebrated with a full choir, sometimes accompanied by an orchestra.[34] In the late 19th century the St John's choir participated in regional choir festivals.[35]

Site development edit

A small hall for Sunday school was erected in 1865 by the generosity of L. H. Smythe.[36] By 1895 the hall had fallen into disrepair, and the needs of the children had outgrown it. The current Parish Hall was planned to replace it. The memorial stone for the replacement building was laid by the Primate of Australia, William Saumarez Smith in inclement weather on 2 February 1895. The architect was E. A. Scott, and his building design was of a "domestic style... with a highly decorated front".[36] It cost £625 10s, was complete within three months,[37] and seated up to 400.[36] However, by 1903, the Sunday school had once again outgrown the space available, and an additional infants classroom was built nearby. This is now called the Small Hall, and is used as a classroom for the St John's Preschool.[8]: p. 13 

 
Elizabeth Underwood's tombstone

A rectory was first provided for the rector J. C. Corlette and his large family in 1879. A block of land, located on what is now the corner of Rectory Avenue and Alt Street, was purchased for £444, and the foundation stone was laid by Bishop Barker in 1880. This original rectory was sold in 1922 for £1800.[18]: p. 21  The current rectory, on the main grounds of the church, was founded by Archbishop John Charles Wright in the same year, during the rectorship of William George Hilliard, and built at a cost of £2500.[38]

Gravel pathways lined with Phoenix canariensis palms, the lawn in front of the church, and the stone churchyard fence were also constructed in the 1920s.[39]: p. 7  The Alt Street wall was erected in 1922, and dedicated to the previous rector Alfred Yarnold. The Bland Street wall was dedicated in 1927 by Archdeacon Davies,[40] and commemorates one of the key contributors, R. A. Forsaith.[18]: p. 28 

 
Australian Air Force Cadets on parade at the annual memorial service in 2007

The cemetery, which had been in existence since soon after the foundation of the church (the first interment was Frederick Underwood, Elizabeth's 11-month-old grandson, on 1 May 1845),[1]: p. 51  was consecrated by the Archbishop of Sydney, Howard West Kilvinton Mowll, on 8 September 1934. By this stage it reportedly already contained the remains of 1,396 people. He was asked by the rector of the time to "set apart the area, containing 4 acres and 4 perches (1.63 ha), as a burial-place for the bodies of Christian people living in and about Ashfield".[41]

Australia's only memorial to Australian Air Force Cadets occupies a prominent position on the grounds, and a memorial service attended by the Cadets has been held annually since it was opened by the State Governor Lieutenant General John Northcott in 1946.[42] It was built by Squadron Leader Arthur Whitehurst who had commanded a squadron at Ashfield during the period 1941–1946, and whose son Douglas Arthur Whitehurst had died in action[43] in World War II.[44]

A children's playground was installed near the Alt St boundary in 2011, and opened by Ashfield Municipal Council Mayor Ted Cassidy and Strathfield MP Charles Casuscelli.[45]

Regional influence edit

A number of local street names were derived from the presence of St John's. Church Street, which ends directly opposite the church entrance, was originally the track used by Burwood residents to reach the church, using a conveniently located fallen tree across Iron Cove Creek.[1]: p. 49 

As the population of Sydney's Inner West grew, many of the Anglican churches in the area were established by the congregation of St John's (including four during the final thirty years of the nineteenth century).[46] These include Balmain, Burwood,[47] Five Dock,[47] St Thomas' Enfield (declared a separate parish in 1868),[48] and St Oswald's Haberfield (1908).[39]: p. 5  Because of this involvement, St John's was later referred to as the "Mother Church of Western Suburbs".[4]

Rectors edit

St. John's has had eighteen rectors to date.[49]

Ordinal Rector Term start Term end Image Developments
1 Joseph Kidd Walpole 1840 1842[5] Walpole was originally from England, and went on mission to Madras in 1836, but his health gave way, and he was transferred to New South Wales.[50] He was ordained as a Deacon in 1936,[50] and as a Priest in 1937.[51] After disappointing progress on the building, he was transferred to Richmond after two years.[39]: p. 3 
2 William Stone, B.A. 1842 1843   Stone was the rector during the period 1842–1843. He grew up in a clerical family in Ireland, married his first cousin, and had nine children, seven of whom joined their parents on the journey to Australia in 1841. When appointed at St John's, he set aside a room in their family home, deemed by the Bishop as temporarily licensed as a place of worship since the church was not yet complete.[52] At the time he was also the minister of the Parish of Concord, and earned a government stipend of £150.[53] He was transferred to Sutton Forest in 1843.[54]
3 Frederick Wilkinson, M.A. 1843 1854[55]   He personally carved much of the woodwork in St Johns. During his rectorship, he also organised for St Mary's church to be built in Balmain,[56] and then St Thomas' Enfield. Once St Mary's was built, he presided alternately in Ashfield and Balmain. During his time at Ashfield, the Wilkinsons lived in a "picturesque, many-gabled wooden house called The Meads in Enfield"[9] (near Burwood road), where he had a large workshop for his wood-carving. He also established a private school at The Meads, which enjoyed a "high reputation as the best collegiate school in the colony".[9] Apart from a return trip to England (serving as the ship's chaplain during the journeys), he continued his leadership of St John's until June 1854 when he accepted 'a special commission for the cure' at Holy Trinity at Millers Point.[9]
4 Thomas Hatham / Hattam Wilkinson 1854 1860[57]   He had originally come to the colonies in the company of his father's brother, Frederick. Since then he had been curate-in-charge at Balmain under his uncle, married Julia Sarah Underwood (Elizabeth's daughter) at St John's,[1]: p. 51  served a short period as chaplain to Darlinghurst Gaol and three years as the assistant minister of St John the Baptist, Canberra. After his uncle left St John's, he became the rector. After leaving St John's, he moved to Enfield, and later Appin, finally returning for burial in the St John's cemetery after his death in 1876.[9][39]: p. 4 
5 William Lumsdain 1860 1865   Lumsdain was newly ordained and he had come to Australia with his two brothers and a sister in 1836[58] in the charge of Bishop Broughton. When he became rector, he rented Ashfield Park House, Elizabeth Underwood's original house as his family residence.[1]: p. 57  Along with Ashfield, he simultaneously held the incumbency for the parishes of Burwood, Enfield, and Five Dock.[59] During his time at St John's, two of his children died of diphtheria on the same day.[60] After finishing at St John's, he continued to serve at Five Dock and Burwood.[61] He died in 1902 aged 78 and is buried in the St John's cemetery.[39]: p. 4 
6 William Cecil Cave-Browne-Cave 1865 1867   Cave-Browne-Cave was a grandson of the ninth Cave-Browne-Cave Baronet.[62] He was recently married when he arrived at St John's. Later in his career he held the rectorship at St Thomas' North Sydney.
7 Canon James Christian Corlette, D.D. 1867 1900[63]   Corlette's previous appointment had been in Jamberoo. He was married to Frances Edith Manning, a daughter of the politician Sir William Montagu Manning.[64] In 1877 she was elected to the committee of the newly formed Infant's Home, as an indication of Anglican support. The home cared for abandoned babies, and was the subject of a storm of protest, with the Roman Catholic Cardinal Patrick Francis Moran accusing it of a "vindication of promiscuous practices".[1]: p. 107  The Corlettes' eight children were all born during his time at St John's. Perhaps not surprisingly, during this period St John's first began to provide a residence for the rector. Corlette encouraged Ashfield's Melanesian population to worship at St John's, and many later returned to the islands as missionaries.[39]: p. 5  He provided more frequent and regular services than his predecessor, and emphasized Saint's Days, Communion and music. During the period 1868–1884 he concurrently held the precentorship at St Andrew's Cathedral, and in 1897 again served there as canon. In 1893 he was chaplain to the Bishop of Sydney, and became rural dean of Petersham in 1895.[65] Along with many of his family, he is buried in the St John's cemetery.[39]: p. 5 
8 Alfred Yarnold 1901 1916[66]   Yarnold's time at Ashfield were the final fifteen years of his career. Immediately previously he had spent nineteen years as the rector of Christ Church, Lavender Bay.[67] Overlapping with his time at St John's, he was also the chaplain to the Archbishop of Sydney, and the rural dean of Petersham.[68] One of Yarnold's curates was the Rev. Charles Clark, who would later father the Australian historian Manning Clark.[69]: 50–1  Clark's mother was a teacher in the St John's Sunday School[69]: p. 52 
9 William George Hilliard, M.A. 1916 1926[70]   Hilliard was recently ordained when he joined St John's, having completed only a four-year curacy at Dulwich Hill. His first wife died during his time at St John's.[39]: p. 7  When he completed his time at St John's, he became the Headmaster of a local private school, Trinity Grammar School. In 1934 he became the Bishop of Nelson. He was described as "one of the most popular evangelicals in the Church life of Australia, and a forceful preacher".[71]
10 Ainslie Arthur Yeates, M.A. 1927 1928[72]   Yeates came to Ashfield from St John's Woolwich. Soon after he arrived he suffered a breakdown in his health, was very sick throughout his time at Ashfield, and died after a four-year incumbency.[73]
11 Herbert Stanley Cocks, B.A. Th.L. 1931 1939   Cocks brought with him a wide experience of church work. Having been ordained just before World War I he had been a chaplain for the A.I.F., and after demobilization a missionary, school principal, and chaplain in India. Most recently he had been rector of Holy Trinity, Erskineville.[74]
12 Leonard Neville Sutton, M.A. 1939 1949[75]   Sutton was a keen teacher, having previously been principal at St Andrew's Cathedral School, chaplain at The King's School, and vice-principal at Brighton Grammar School.[76] He was very interested in the welfare of young people.[77] This enthusiasm led him to start the St John's Preschool. The Sunday School also had 350 pupils at the time.[8]: p. 16 
13 Frederick Allen Seymour Shaw, B.A. Th.L. 1949 1966 Shaw had already served as an assistant clergyman at St John's during 1930–1931. During that time, he was ordained.[78] Eighteen years later he returned to St John's as the rector.[79][80]
14 John R. Seddon, Th.L. Dip.R.E. 1966 1973 [81]
15 Percy William "Bill" George Twine, Th.L. L.T.C.L. 1973 1980 Twine had long been an organ player, and inclined toward high church style.[82] He died suddenly whilst still the rector.
16 Stanford Ronald Colefax, R.F.D. Dip.Th. 1980 1990
17 Dennis P. Robinson, Th.L. 1990 2003
18 Andrew Katay, B.D. M.Th. 2005 incumbent Katay was previously a Senior Associate Minister at St. Barnabas, Broadway, and Anglican chaplain at The University of Sydney, while leading the staff team of the Sydney University Evangelical Union.[83] His arrival at the church marked a change from two traditional communion services to congregations with a variety of styles.[84]

Acting rectors edit

From time to time, an acting rector or locum tenens has taken on temporary leadership, or filled a gap between rectors.[49][85]

 
Arthur Corlette
 
Arthur Killworth
 
William Charlton

Septimus Hungerford was acting rector in 1879. He had previously been the rector of St Peter's Cathedral, Armidale.[86] Later he became the incumbent at St Thomas' Enfield.

William Hough took temporary leadership in 1889 whilst J. C. Corlette undertook the precentorship of Goulburn Cathedral.[46][87]

Arthur Christian Corlette stood in temporarily for his older brother J. C. Corlette in 1898.[88]

Robert William Phayre Montgomery filled in at St John's after the death of J. C. Corlette, during the period 1900–1901. He was an Irishman who came to Australia as a missionary chaplain in 1891. After leaving St John's he took up a position as vicar of Cressy[89]

Arthur Killworth M.A. LL.B., acted as rector during the period 1928–1931.[90]

Archdeacon William Apedaile Charlton led St John's for four months in 1939 after the departure of H. S. Cocks. He had already served in Sydney churches for 55 years.[75][91]

James R. Le Huray, Th.L. was the acting rector during the period 2004–2005.[85] Rev J.R Le Huray came to St John's from Holy Trinity Kingsford, where he had served for 27 years as Rector. He is currently at St Jude's Randwick, as Assistant Minister.[92]

Education edit

 
The school building established in the 1850s

In the mid-1850s St John's established a Church of England Denominational Day School in a small, plain white stone building near the corner of Charlotte and Bland St,[1]: p. 74 [13]: p. 102  However, when the Ashfield public school expanded in 1875, the church school proved unable to compete, and by 1880 it was closed.[1]: p. 74 [13]: p. 103  The building was sold to the newly begun Ashfield Boy's College in 1882, but was demolished in 1885.[1]: p. 112 

Catholic education in the area flourished, and seeing this, J. C. Corlette wrote to England to Miss Ellen Clarke, suggesting that she start a school for young ladies in Ashfield. This went ahead, the school known as Normanhurst School began in a cottage in Bland Street. Although it was officially non-denominational, Normanhurst maintained strong links with St John's. The school grew, and moved premises to Orpington Street, but eventually closed down in 1941.[1]: p. 114 

Land and buildings edit

 
Chancel including the reredos hand-carved by Rev Wilkinson

Church edit

Having evolved over a long period, the church building displays elements of a range of styles including Colonial Gothic Picturesque, Victorian and Federation Free Gothic. The transepts and chancel are constructed from Sydney sandstone, whereas the nave and tower are rendered brick. The roofs are all slate.[5]

The interior has been described as "architecturally much more satisfying than its exterior".[5] It has a hammerbeam ceiling with a curved rafter roof with colonettes, plaster walls, and stained glass in every window from a range of periods. The reredos and pulpit are distinctive cedar carvings by the early rector F. Wilkinson.[5][8]: p. 6 

Cemetery edit

 
A section of the cemetery
 
The Southern Entrance to the cemetery
 
Charles Van Treight, an early sexton at St John's, responsible for the operations of the cemetery[nb 1][93]

The cemetery is geographically aligned with the church, and takes up a large portion of the land area. The oldest graves are on the eastern side of the path, and typically face west. Newer graves on the western side of the path generally face east.[39]: p. 9 

A number of notable former Ashfield residents are buried at St John's. First Fleet convict, John Limeburner/Linburner, had been transported for stealing clothing to the value of about one pound, eventually died in 1847 aged 104.[1][94] His headstone was defaced by vandals in 1965.[95] Several members of the Wilkinson and Underwood families were significant in the early European settlement of the Ashfield district.[41] Louise Taplin (1855–1901) was matron of The Infants' Home Child and Family Services for 15 years until her death, and led the home through the 1890s depression, despite a shortage of salaried staff.[96] Henry Halloran (1811–1893) was a poet and resident of Ashfield, and was married to Elizabeth Underwood's daughter Elizabeth.[97] Thomas Walker, a banker and philanthropist who owned and developed Yaralla Estate, is in a family grave with his wife Jane, and daughter Eadith's ashes.[98][99] Samuel Henry Terry, a wealthy landowner and politician is also buried at St Johns, having spent the last part of his life in an Ashfield residence named The Lilacs.[100] Randolph John Want was a solicitor and member of the New South Wales Legislative Council.[101] Edward Wrench was one of the founding partners of real estate agents Richardson & Wrench.[102] Amy Schauer was a cookery instructor and author.[103] The graveyard also contains members of the Taverner, Uhr and Rodd families, after whom the localities Taverner's Hill, Uhr's Point, and Rodd Point are named. There are also graves of three former rectors: T. H. Wilkinson, W. Lumsdaine, and J. C. Corlette, and members of their families, together with a pioneer clergyman, E. Rogers.[41]

Beside these prominent figures, many of the St John's graves contain children. Typhoid and whooping cough epidemics took heavy tolls in the Victorian period. Although Ashfield was known as a healthy area, many families lost two or even three children.[39]: p. 9 

Burial rates at St John's declined rapidly around the turn of the 20th century. The rector's notes from the time indicate that many funeral services conducted at the church now preceded burial at Rookwood Cemetery.[39]: p. 6  Although the cemetery has never officially been closed, no burial plots have been sold for some years. A memorial garden for the interment of ashes was opened in the time of J. R. Seddon, providing a popular resting place for the Ashfield community.[8]: p. 16 

Since the late 1970s day-release prisoners have assisted with maintenance of the cemetery grounds.[39]: p. 8  In Australia's bicentennial year, 1988, a $16,000 grant was awarded for restoration work in the cemetery, at which time some broken gravestones were cemented together, and some illegible ones were 'cut back' and the letters repainted.[39]: p. 8 

Annex edit

In 2017 an annex was added directly adjacent and connected to the western side of the church, to provide running water, kitchen and function facilities to the church. It is used mainly for kid's church and communal meals (primarily morning tea) after church services.

Ministry edit

 
In 2008, the Parish of Ashfield (green), was amalgamated with that of Five Dock and Haberfield (blue), to form Christ Church Inner West.

Andrew Katay became the 18th rector in early 2005. In 2008 the church was part of an amalgamation with the parish of Five Dock and Haberfield, forming Christ Church Inner West Anglican Community (CCIW)[104] with Andrew Katay continuing as the rector of the new parish. There are currently three Sunday services at Ashfield, and two at Five Dock.[105]

Since July 2006 it has run a mothers and children group, which discusses Christian parenting issues, and teaches English to those for whom it is not their native language.[84]

In 2010 the church began an outdoor film festival showing ghost and horror movies in the historic cemetery.[106][107]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Van Treight's primary job was in sanitation and health at the Ashfield Municipal Council. He attended St John's for 45 out of 46 years in Ashfield, and sang in the choir for 30 of those. At his funeral, W. G. Hilliard told of his Christian faith, noting that he was "on his knees in prayer at his bedside when the Angel of the Lord called him".

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Coupe, Sheena; Coupe, Robert (1988). Speed The Plough, Ashfield 1788–1988. The Council of the Municipality of Ashfield. ISBN 0-9595234-1-3.
  2. ^ a b Brady, Fiona (19 January 2010). "Where the streets have strange names". Inner West Courier. p. 10. Retrieved 24 September 2010.
  3. ^ Pratten, Chris (1996). "A Short Walk Through Ashfield's Past" (PDF). Ashfield Municipal Council. Retrieved 7 September 2010.
  4. ^ a b c d Cocks, Herbert S. (8 September 1934). "St. John the Baptist's, Ashfield – Mother Church of Western Suburbs". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 9. Retrieved 8 September 2010.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Godden Mackay Pty Ltd (Richard Mackay, Robert Irving, Chris Pratten, Jill Sheppard, Stephen Harris) (25 March 1992). "Ashfield Heritage Study – St John's Anglican Church" (PDF). Ashfield Municipal Council. Retrieved 7 September 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ "Parish in Focus: St John's Ashfield". South Sydney News, Southern Cross. Published by the Anglican Diocese of Sydney, March 2007. ISSN 1445-0089.
  7. ^ a b "Domestic Intelligence – Australian Diocesan Committee". The Sydney Morning Herald. Vol. XXI, no. 2713. 22 January 1846.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Smith, Ruth & White, Ron (1980). A Sketchbook of St. John's Ashfield.
  9. ^ a b c d e Harrison, Anthony. "Rev Wilkinson 2". Retrieved 14 September 2010.
  10. ^ "Ashfield". The Colonist. 24 March 1838. p. 3. Retrieved 11 October 2010.
  11. ^ a b c "Domestic Intelligence – Ashfield Church". The Sydney Morning Herald. 14 September 1840. p. 3. Retrieved 6 September 2010.
  12. ^ "Ashfield Church – Important to the future Villagers of Ashfield, and the Inhabitants on the Parramatta and Liverpool Roads". The Australian. 28 August 1838. p. 3. Retrieved 11 October 2010.
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External links edit

  • St. John's Ashfield home page
  • CCIW home page

john, ashfield, john, baptist, anglican, church, active, anglican, church, located, between, bland, streets, ashfield, suburb, sydney, south, wales, australia, founded, 1840, land, donated, elizabeth, underwood, church, building, oldest, authenticated, survivi. St John the Baptist Anglican Church is an active Anglican church located between Alt and Bland Streets Ashfield a suburb of Sydney New South Wales Australia Founded in 1840 on land donated by Elizabeth Underwood the church building is the oldest authenticated surviving building in Ashfield having been built at the time when subdivision increased the population density sufficiently to turn Ashfield into a town 3 It was also the first church built along the Parramatta Road which linked the early colonial towns of Sydney and Parramatta 4 The earliest remaining parts of the building are one of the first Sydney designs by the colonial architect Edmund Blacket who later became renowned for his ecclesiastical architecture 1 p 51 St John s AshfieldSt John the Baptist Anglican ChurchThe northern side of the church building The central rendered section nave is the original church building The sandstone section on the left transept and chancel was completed in 1875 The tower on the right was added in 1901 St John s AshfieldLocation in Greater Sydney33 52 54 S 151 07 40 E 33 8817 S 151 1278 E 33 8817 151 1278LocationAlt and Bland Streets Ashfield Sydney New South WalesCountryAustraliaDenominationAnglican Church of AustraliaWebsitewww wbr cciw wbr church wbr ashfieldHistoryStatusChurchFounded9 September 1840 1840 09 09 Founder s Joseph Kidd WalpoleConsecrated19 August 1845 1845 08 19 Associated peopleWilliam George Hilliard rector who later became the Bishop of Nelson ArchitectureFunctional statusActiveHeritage designationLocal GovernmentDesignated20 December 1985Architect s Edmund BlacketYears built1841 45AdministrationDioceseSydneyArchdeaconrySouth Sydney RegionDeaneryChrist Church Inner WestClergyRectorAndrew Katay since 2005 A map of the St John s site Charlotte and Julia streets are named after two of the daughters of Elizabeth Underwood who donated the first land to build the church Julia s husband also became the fourth rector 1 p 51 Bland street is named after another of the early benefactors William Bland 2 The expansive church grounds contain a cemetery dating back to 1845 that contains the remains of many notable Ashfield residents Australia s only memorial to Australian Air Force Cadets occupies a prominent position near the entrance to the church The St John s site has been listed on the Local Environment Plan Heritage Schedule and the Register of the National Trust of Australia 5 St John s is one of three churches along with St Albans Five Dock and St Oswald s Haberfield which make up Christ Church Inner West operating within the parish of Ashfield Five Dock and Haberfield as part of the South Sydney Region of the Anglican Diocese of Sydney The church has had 18 rectors including William George Hilliard who later became the Bishop of Nelson Andrew Katay has been rector since early 2005 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early contributors 1 2 Church building 1 3 Music 1 4 Site development 1 5 Regional influence 1 6 Rectors 1 7 Acting rectors 1 8 Education 2 Land and buildings 2 1 Church 2 2 Cemetery 2 3 Annex 3 Ministry 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksHistory editSt John s was the first church to be established along Parramatta Road between the colonial towns of Sydney and Parramatta then known as Rose Hill 4 during a time of rapid church building when many of the oldest churches in Sydney were erected 7 Since 1810 the Parish of Ashfield had extended from Balmain to Strathfield and from Enfield to the Parramatta River and in 1840 this was formalized into an ecclesiastical district 8 p 5 9 Early contributors edit nbsp Elizabeth Underwood nbsp William Bland The first portion of grounds an area of 1 acre 2 roods and 36 perches a total of 0 698 ha 1 p 49 was provided as a gift by the local landowner Elizabeth Underwood who was subdividing Ashfield Park 10 11 The Bishop of Australia William Grant Broughton added urgency by expressing his intention of having a Place of Worship erected immediately on the allotment of land appropriated for that purpose 12 13 p 21 Another benefactor was William Bland a doctor and politician who had been sent to the colony having been convicted of manslaughter after pistol duel which left his opponent mortally wounded 14 and after whom Bland street is named 2 He gave a donation of 200 15 and land 14 Fellow local medical practitioner James Bowman contributed a similarly munificent donation 15 By mid 1839 the funds received were thought to be sufficient to commence building 7 p 2 The exact location was determined in February 1840 and appeals continued to fund a building of sufficient size for the surrounding population 16 Church building edit nbsp A stained glass panel in the chancel unveiled in 1934 illustrating Jesus words I am the Resurrection and the Life John 11 25 17 The church was founded on 9 September 1840 11 The service on that day was read by the first rector Joseph Kidd Walpole who had come to the district from Christ Church Kelso and had begun to plan the church building 18 p 10 W G Broughton made an address at the ceremony 11 The anniversary sermon was preached by Robert Allwood 19 This Foundation Stone of a church dedicated to the honor and worship of Almighty God and to be denominated The Church of St John the Baptist was laid the 9th day of September 1840 By the Right Reverend Father in God William Lord Bishop of Australia in the Fourth Year of the reign of Queen Victoria Sir George Gipps Knight Governor Rev Joseph Kidd Walpole Minister Among those that are born of women there is not a greater Prophet than John the Baptist but he that is last in the Kingdom of God is greater than he Luke vii 28 Plaque inside the foundation stone location unknown 4 20 nbsp The original church building measuring 61 feet 19 m by 31 feet 9 4 m 1 p 51 Building work on the church began in 1841 but construction came to a standstill due to construction problems and insufficient subscriptions 1 p 49 21 The following year the colonial architect Edmund Blacket as one of his first assignments after arriving in Sydney was requested to inspect the church s walls then still under construction As a result of his report the walls were demolished and re erected 1 p 50 although continued funding problems and the transfer of J K Walpole to Windsor 22 caused further delays 23 The church was licensed for operation on 1 October 1843 13 p 115 Much of the interior woodwork was carved by the third rector Frederick Wilkinson 24 The roof was strengthened in around 1845 by the installation of timber support columns 5 On 16 August 1845 at a cost of 100 the church purchased an additional 2 5 acres 1 0 ha of land from Elizabeth Underwood who remained a parishioner until her death and is buried in a prominent grave within the church cemetery 1 p 51 8 p 6 The church was eventually consecrated on 19 August 1845 24 nbsp The exterior after the 1875 additions 1 p 93 nbsp The crossing and chancel as it appeared in 1883 After 29 years as the Bishop of Sydney Frederic Barker put it the population of Sydney had invaded these sylvan shades 25 so an expansion was required Blacket designed the current stone transept and chancel to transform the church into a cruciform plan These were built during the period 1874 1875 1 p 93 at a cost of around 150 raised without the help of grants from the government or the English societies 25 The foundation stone of the addition was laid by Barker on 24 October 1874 and included a copy of Australian Churchman and The Sydney Morning Herald At the time this addition accommodated an extra 250 seats bringing the total capacity to 446 25 Construction of the choir vestry and a wooden porch outside the western door were completed in 1885 and dedicated by Bishop Alfred Barry 8 p 9 This work was overseen by the Blacket brothers 5 who had followed the trade of their late father Arthur Blacket then designed the west tower 5 The eight bell peal was ordered from England after a generous bequest by one of the Melanesian boys David Marguay and subsequent fundraising 26 The tower was then quickly constructed at a cost of around 250 in memory of the recently deceased rector James Christian Corlette 27 and dedicated as The Corlette Memorial Tower on 1 November 1901 26 The memorial bells proved depressing amongst the local populace 1 p 150 and were rearranged in 1904 with louvres added to the previously open arches 28 This was apparently ineffective as the bells were removed within a few years 1 p 150 Music edit nbsp The 1883 Hill and Son pipe organ located in the north eastern corner of the transept Prior to the installation of a pipe organ a seraphine and then a harmonium were used for musical accompaniment The first organ was installed above the gallery at the western end of the church by William Davidson at the request of the rector J C Corlette and was transferred to the south transept in about 1879 where it remained until 1882 when it was sold to St Bartholomew s Pyrmont and later St Luke s Northmead 8 p 8 29 The 1883 Hill and Son organ including 844 pipes costing a total of 550 was installed in 1884 30 31 and located in the north east corner of the transept 8 p 8 It is still in use with original pipework making it faithful to the original tones The organ was refurbished and rebuilt in 1950 1975 and 2008 29 32 The 1950 change from mechanical to electrical action was motivated by removing the increasingly noisy pedals and trackers This refurbishment also included detachment of the console to the other side of the transept and replacement of the bellows with a pressure equaliser 33 The facade pipes were sprayed to a dull gold colour covering over the original diapering described disparagingly at the time as all over the pipes without much rhyme or reason fleurs de lys in profusion dots bands triangles in all the colours of the rainbow rioted in confusion 33 This work was carried out by R A and D A Wiltshire 29 33 By 1975 the organ had become unplayable and a reconversion to mechanical action was undertaken The console was moved back to the organ side of the transept with the action going backward under the floor into the organ This necessitated removal of floor joists and foundation piers but the unsupported floor caused further problems long term and during the 2008 rebuild it was re electrified 29 Between 2006 and 2008 Sydney firm John W Parker Pipe Organ Builders refurbished the organ returning the soundboard action to electric providing a new roll top detached console and an entirely new wind supply and bellows The swell box which had been discarded in the 1975 rebuild was reinstated and the pedal Bourdon 16 stop was extended to 8 pitch Octave couplers were provided in Sub and Octave pitches on the Swell also All manual pipework was washed cleaned and regulated to original Hill standards and tonality The church had a significant choral history with significant events often celebrated with a full choir sometimes accompanied by an orchestra 34 In the late 19th century the St John s choir participated in regional choir festivals 35 Site development edit A small hall for Sunday school was erected in 1865 by the generosity of L H Smythe 36 By 1895 the hall had fallen into disrepair and the needs of the children had outgrown it The current Parish Hall was planned to replace it The memorial stone for the replacement building was laid by the Primate of Australia William Saumarez Smith in inclement weather on 2 February 1895 The architect was E A Scott and his building design was of a domestic style with a highly decorated front 36 It cost 625 10s was complete within three months 37 and seated up to 400 36 However by 1903 the Sunday school had once again outgrown the space available and an additional infants classroom was built nearby This is now called the Small Hall and is used as a classroom for the St John s Preschool 8 p 13 nbsp Elizabeth Underwood s tombstone A rectory was first provided for the rector J C Corlette and his large family in 1879 A block of land located on what is now the corner of Rectory Avenue and Alt Street was purchased for 444 and the foundation stone was laid by Bishop Barker in 1880 This original rectory was sold in 1922 for 1800 18 p 21 The current rectory on the main grounds of the church was founded by Archbishop John Charles Wright in the same year during the rectorship of William George Hilliard and built at a cost of 2500 38 Gravel pathways lined with Phoenix canariensis palms the lawn in front of the church and the stone churchyard fence were also constructed in the 1920s 39 p 7 The Alt Street wall was erected in 1922 and dedicated to the previous rector Alfred Yarnold The Bland Street wall was dedicated in 1927 by Archdeacon Davies 40 and commemorates one of the key contributors R A Forsaith 18 p 28 nbsp Australian Air Force Cadets on parade at the annual memorial service in 2007 The cemetery which had been in existence since soon after the foundation of the church the first interment was Frederick Underwood Elizabeth s 11 month old grandson on 1 May 1845 1 p 51 was consecrated by the Archbishop of Sydney Howard West Kilvinton Mowll on 8 September 1934 By this stage it reportedly already contained the remains of 1 396 people He was asked by the rector of the time to set apart the area containing 4 acres and 4 perches 1 63 ha as a burial place for the bodies of Christian people living in and about Ashfield 41 Australia s only memorial to Australian Air Force Cadets occupies a prominent position on the grounds and a memorial service attended by the Cadets has been held annually since it was opened by the State Governor Lieutenant General John Northcott in 1946 42 It was built by Squadron Leader Arthur Whitehurst who had commanded a squadron at Ashfield during the period 1941 1946 and whose son Douglas Arthur Whitehurst had died in action 43 in World War II 44 A children s playground was installed near the Alt St boundary in 2011 and opened by Ashfield Municipal Council Mayor Ted Cassidy and Strathfield MP Charles Casuscelli 45 Regional influence edit A number of local street names were derived from the presence of St John s Church Street which ends directly opposite the church entrance was originally the track used by Burwood residents to reach the church using a conveniently located fallen tree across Iron Cove Creek 1 p 49 As the population of Sydney s Inner West grew many of the Anglican churches in the area were established by the congregation of St John s including four during the final thirty years of the nineteenth century 46 These include Balmain Burwood 47 Five Dock 47 St Thomas Enfield declared a separate parish in 1868 48 and St Oswald s Haberfield 1908 39 p 5 Because of this involvement St John s was later referred to as the Mother Church of Western Suburbs 4 Rectors edit St John s has had eighteen rectors to date 49 Ordinal Rector Term start Term end Image Developments 1 Joseph Kidd Walpole 1840 1842 5 Walpole was originally from England and went on mission to Madras in 1836 but his health gave way and he was transferred to New South Wales 50 He was ordained as a Deacon in 1936 50 and as a Priest in 1937 51 After disappointing progress on the building he was transferred to Richmond after two years 39 p 3 2 William Stone B A 1842 1843 nbsp Stone was the rector during the period 1842 1843 He grew up in a clerical family in Ireland married his first cousin and had nine children seven of whom joined their parents on the journey to Australia in 1841 When appointed at St John s he set aside a room in their family home deemed by the Bishop as temporarily licensed as a place of worship since the church was not yet complete 52 At the time he was also the minister of the Parish of Concord and earned a government stipend of 150 53 He was transferred to Sutton Forest in 1843 54 3 Frederick Wilkinson M A 1843 1854 55 nbsp He personally carved much of the woodwork in St Johns During his rectorship he also organised for St Mary s church to be built in Balmain 56 and then St Thomas Enfield Once St Mary s was built he presided alternately in Ashfield and Balmain During his time at Ashfield the Wilkinsons lived in a picturesque many gabled wooden house called The Meads in Enfield 9 near Burwood road where he had a large workshop for his wood carving He also established a private school at The Meads which enjoyed a high reputation as the best collegiate school in the colony 9 Apart from a return trip to England serving as the ship s chaplain during the journeys he continued his leadership of St John s until June 1854 when he accepted a special commission for the cure at Holy Trinity at Millers Point 9 4 Thomas Hatham Hattam Wilkinson 1854 1860 57 nbsp He had originally come to the colonies in the company of his father s brother Frederick Since then he had been curate in charge at Balmain under his uncle married Julia Sarah Underwood Elizabeth s daughter at St John s 1 p 51 served a short period as chaplain to Darlinghurst Gaol and three years as the assistant minister of St John the Baptist Canberra After his uncle left St John s he became the rector After leaving St John s he moved to Enfield and later Appin finally returning for burial in the St John s cemetery after his death in 1876 9 39 p 4 5 William Lumsdain 1860 1865 nbsp Lumsdain was newly ordained and he had come to Australia with his two brothers and a sister in 1836 58 in the charge of Bishop Broughton When he became rector he rented Ashfield Park House Elizabeth Underwood s original house as his family residence 1 p 57 Along with Ashfield he simultaneously held the incumbency for the parishes of Burwood Enfield and Five Dock 59 During his time at St John s two of his children died of diphtheria on the same day 60 After finishing at St John s he continued to serve at Five Dock and Burwood 61 He died in 1902 aged 78 and is buried in the St John s cemetery 39 p 4 6 William Cecil Cave Browne Cave 1865 1867 nbsp Cave Browne Cave was a grandson of the ninth Cave Browne Cave Baronet 62 He was recently married when he arrived at St John s Later in his career he held the rectorship at St Thomas North Sydney 7 Canon James Christian Corlette D D 1867 1900 63 nbsp Corlette s previous appointment had been in Jamberoo He was married to Frances Edith Manning a daughter of the politician Sir William Montagu Manning 64 In 1877 she was elected to the committee of the newly formed Infant s Home as an indication of Anglican support The home cared for abandoned babies and was the subject of a storm of protest with the Roman Catholic Cardinal Patrick Francis Moran accusing it of a vindication of promiscuous practices 1 p 107 The Corlettes eight children were all born during his time at St John s Perhaps not surprisingly during this period St John s first began to provide a residence for the rector Corlette encouraged Ashfield s Melanesian population to worship at St John s and many later returned to the islands as missionaries 39 p 5 He provided more frequent and regular services than his predecessor and emphasized Saint s Days Communion and music During the period 1868 1884 he concurrently held the precentorship at St Andrew s Cathedral and in 1897 again served there as canon In 1893 he was chaplain to the Bishop of Sydney and became rural dean of Petersham in 1895 65 Along with many of his family he is buried in the St John s cemetery 39 p 5 8 Alfred Yarnold 1901 1916 66 nbsp Yarnold s time at Ashfield were the final fifteen years of his career Immediately previously he had spent nineteen years as the rector of Christ Church Lavender Bay 67 Overlapping with his time at St John s he was also the chaplain to the Archbishop of Sydney and the rural dean of Petersham 68 One of Yarnold s curates was the Rev Charles Clark who would later father the Australian historian Manning Clark 69 50 1 Clark s mother was a teacher in the St John s Sunday School 69 p 52 9 William George Hilliard M A 1916 1926 70 nbsp Hilliard was recently ordained when he joined St John s having completed only a four year curacy at Dulwich Hill His first wife died during his time at St John s 39 p 7 When he completed his time at St John s he became the Headmaster of a local private school Trinity Grammar School In 1934 he became the Bishop of Nelson He was described as one of the most popular evangelicals in the Church life of Australia and a forceful preacher 71 10 Ainslie Arthur Yeates M A 1927 1928 72 nbsp Yeates came to Ashfield from St John s Woolwich Soon after he arrived he suffered a breakdown in his health was very sick throughout his time at Ashfield and died after a four year incumbency 73 11 Herbert Stanley Cocks B A Th L 1931 1939 nbsp Cocks brought with him a wide experience of church work Having been ordained just before World War I he had been a chaplain for the A I F and after demobilization a missionary school principal and chaplain in India Most recently he had been rector of Holy Trinity Erskineville 74 12 Leonard Neville Sutton M A 1939 1949 75 nbsp Sutton was a keen teacher having previously been principal at St Andrew s Cathedral School chaplain at The King s School and vice principal at Brighton Grammar School 76 He was very interested in the welfare of young people 77 This enthusiasm led him to start the St John s Preschool The Sunday School also had 350 pupils at the time 8 p 16 13 Frederick Allen Seymour Shaw B A Th L 1949 1966 Shaw had already served as an assistant clergyman at St John s during 1930 1931 During that time he was ordained 78 Eighteen years later he returned to St John s as the rector 79 80 14 John R Seddon Th L Dip R E 1966 1973 81 15 Percy William Bill George Twine Th L L T C L 1973 1980 Twine had long been an organ player and inclined toward high church style 82 He died suddenly whilst still the rector 16 Stanford Ronald Colefax R F D Dip Th 1980 1990 17 Dennis P Robinson Th L 1990 2003 18 Andrew Katay B D M Th 2005 incumbent Katay was previously a Senior Associate Minister at St Barnabas Broadway and Anglican chaplain at The University of Sydney while leading the staff team of the Sydney University Evangelical Union 83 His arrival at the church marked a change from two traditional communion services to congregations with a variety of styles 84 Acting rectors edit From time to time an acting rector or locum tenens has taken on temporary leadership or filled a gap between rectors 49 85 nbsp Arthur Corlette nbsp Arthur Killworth nbsp William Charlton Septimus Hungerford was acting rector in 1879 He had previously been the rector of St Peter s Cathedral Armidale 86 Later he became the incumbent at St Thomas Enfield William Hough took temporary leadership in 1889 whilst J C Corlette undertook the precentorship of Goulburn Cathedral 46 87 Arthur Christian Corlette stood in temporarily for his older brother J C Corlette in 1898 88 Robert William Phayre Montgomery filled in at St John s after the death of J C Corlette during the period 1900 1901 He was an Irishman who came to Australia as a missionary chaplain in 1891 After leaving St John s he took up a position as vicar of Cressy 89 Arthur Killworth M A LL B acted as rector during the period 1928 1931 90 Archdeacon William Apedaile Charlton led St John s for four months in 1939 after the departure of H S Cocks He had already served in Sydney churches for 55 years 75 91 James R Le Huray Th L was the acting rector during the period 2004 2005 85 Rev J R Le Huray came to St John s from Holy Trinity Kingsford where he had served for 27 years as Rector He is currently at St Jude s Randwick as Assistant Minister 92 Education edit nbsp The school building established in the 1850s In the mid 1850s St John s established a Church of England Denominational Day School in a small plain white stone building near the corner of Charlotte and Bland St 1 p 74 13 p 102 However when the Ashfield public school expanded in 1875 the church school proved unable to compete and by 1880 it was closed 1 p 74 13 p 103 The building was sold to the newly begun Ashfield Boy s College in 1882 but was demolished in 1885 1 p 112 Catholic education in the area flourished and seeing this J C Corlette wrote to England to Miss Ellen Clarke suggesting that she start a school for young ladies in Ashfield This went ahead the school known as Normanhurst School began in a cottage in Bland Street Although it was officially non denominational Normanhurst maintained strong links with St John s The school grew and moved premises to Orpington Street but eventually closed down in 1941 1 p 114 Land and buildings edit nbsp Chancel including the reredos hand carved by Rev Wilkinson Church edit Having evolved over a long period the church building displays elements of a range of styles including Colonial Gothic Picturesque Victorian and Federation Free Gothic The transepts and chancel are constructed from Sydney sandstone whereas the nave and tower are rendered brick The roofs are all slate 5 The interior has been described as architecturally much more satisfying than its exterior 5 It has a hammerbeam ceiling with a curved rafter roof with colonettes plaster walls and stained glass in every window from a range of periods The reredos and pulpit are distinctive cedar carvings by the early rector F Wilkinson 5 8 p 6 Cemetery edit nbsp A section of the cemetery nbsp The Southern Entrance to the cemetery nbsp Charles Van Treight an early sexton at St John s responsible for the operations of the cemetery nb 1 93 The cemetery is geographically aligned with the church and takes up a large portion of the land area The oldest graves are on the eastern side of the path and typically face west Newer graves on the western side of the path generally face east 39 p 9 A number of notable former Ashfield residents are buried at St John s First Fleet convict John Limeburner Linburner had been transported for stealing clothing to the value of about one pound eventually died in 1847 aged 104 1 94 His headstone was defaced by vandals in 1965 95 Several members of the Wilkinson and Underwood families were significant in the early European settlement of the Ashfield district 41 Louise Taplin 1855 1901 was matron of The Infants Home Child and Family Services for 15 years until her death and led the home through the 1890s depression despite a shortage of salaried staff 96 Henry Halloran 1811 1893 was a poet and resident of Ashfield and was married to Elizabeth Underwood s daughter Elizabeth 97 Thomas Walker a banker and philanthropist who owned and developed Yaralla Estate is in a family grave with his wife Jane and daughter Eadith s ashes 98 99 Samuel Henry Terry a wealthy landowner and politician is also buried at St Johns having spent the last part of his life in an Ashfield residence named The Lilacs 100 Randolph John Want was a solicitor and member of the New South Wales Legislative Council 101 Edward Wrench was one of the founding partners of real estate agents Richardson amp Wrench 102 Amy Schauer was a cookery instructor and author 103 The graveyard also contains members of the Taverner Uhr and Rodd families after whom the localities Taverner s Hill Uhr s Point and Rodd Point are named There are also graves of three former rectors T H Wilkinson W Lumsdaine and J C Corlette and members of their families together with a pioneer clergyman E Rogers 41 Beside these prominent figures many of the St John s graves contain children Typhoid and whooping cough epidemics took heavy tolls in the Victorian period Although Ashfield was known as a healthy area many families lost two or even three children 39 p 9 Burial rates at St John s declined rapidly around the turn of the 20th century The rector s notes from the time indicate that many funeral services conducted at the church now preceded burial at Rookwood Cemetery 39 p 6 Although the cemetery has never officially been closed no burial plots have been sold for some years A memorial garden for the interment of ashes was opened in the time of J R Seddon providing a popular resting place for the Ashfield community 8 p 16 Since the late 1970s day release prisoners have assisted with maintenance of the cemetery grounds 39 p 8 In Australia s bicentennial year 1988 a 16 000 grant was awarded for restoration work in the cemetery at which time some broken gravestones were cemented together and some illegible ones were cut back and the letters repainted 39 p 8 Annex edit In 2017 an annex was added directly adjacent and connected to the western side of the church to provide running water kitchen and function facilities to the church It is used mainly for kid s church and communal meals primarily morning tea after church services Ministry edit nbsp In 2008 the Parish of Ashfield green was amalgamated with that of Five Dock and Haberfield blue to form Christ Church Inner West Andrew Katay became the 18th rector in early 2005 In 2008 the church was part of an amalgamation with the parish of Five Dock and Haberfield forming Christ Church Inner West Anglican Community CCIW 104 with Andrew Katay continuing as the rector of the new parish There are currently three Sunday services at Ashfield and two at Five Dock 105 Since July 2006 it has run a mothers and children group which discusses Christian parenting issues and teaches English to those for whom it is not their native language 84 In 2010 the church began an outdoor film festival showing ghost and horror movies in the historic cemetery 106 107 See also edit nbsp New South Wales portal nbsp Christianity portal nbsp Architecture portal Australian non residential architectural styles List of Anglican churches in the Diocese of SydneyNotes edit Van Treight s primary job was in sanitation and health at the Ashfield Municipal Council He attended St John s for 45 out of 46 years in Ashfield and sang in the choir for 30 of those At his funeral W G Hilliard told of his Christian faith noting that he was on his knees in prayer at his bedside when the Angel of the Lord called him References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Coupe Sheena Coupe Robert 1988 Speed The Plough Ashfield 1788 1988 The Council of the Municipality of Ashfield ISBN 0 9595234 1 3 a b Brady Fiona 19 January 2010 Where the streets have strange names Inner West Courier p 10 Retrieved 24 September 2010 Pratten Chris 1996 A Short Walk Through Ashfield s Past PDF Ashfield Municipal Council Retrieved 7 September 2010 a b c d Cocks Herbert S 8 September 1934 St John the Baptist s Ashfield Mother Church of Western Suburbs The Sydney Morning Herald p 9 Retrieved 8 September 2010 a b c d e f g h Godden Mackay Pty Ltd Richard Mackay Robert Irving Chris Pratten Jill Sheppard Stephen Harris 25 March 1992 Ashfield Heritage Study St John s Anglican Church PDF Ashfield Municipal Council Retrieved 7 September 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Parish in Focus St John s Ashfield South Sydney News Southern Cross Published by the Anglican Diocese of Sydney March 2007 ISSN 1445 0089 a b Domestic Intelligence Australian Diocesan Committee The Sydney Morning Herald Vol XXI no 2713 22 January 1846 a b c d e f g h i Smith Ruth amp White Ron 1980 A Sketchbook of St John s Ashfield a b c d e Harrison Anthony Rev Wilkinson 2 Retrieved 14 September 2010 Ashfield The Colonist 24 March 1838 p 3 Retrieved 11 October 2010 a b c Domestic Intelligence Ashfield Church The Sydney Morning Herald 14 September 1840 p 3 Retrieved 6 September 2010 Ashfield Church Important to the future Villagers of Ashfield and the Inhabitants on the Parramatta and Liverpool Roads The Australian 28 August 1838 p 3 Retrieved 11 October 2010 a b c d Ruhen Carl ed 1972 Ashfield 1871 1971 Horwitz Publications ISBN 9780725501907 a b Cobley John 1966 Bland William 1789 1868 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 1 Melbourne University Press pp 112 115 Retrieved 24 September 2010 a b Domestic Intelligence Ecclesiastical The Sydney Morning Herald 23 April 1839 p 2 Retrieved 24 September 2010 Ashfield Church The Australian 13 February 1840 p 1 Retrieved 11 October 2010 Historic Church Services at St John s Ashfield The Sydney Morning Herald 18 June 1934 p 15 Retrieved 13 September 2010 a b c Sutton Leonard 1940 Foundation Stone Centenary 1840 1940 A Brief Illustrated History James amp James Printers and Publishers Domestic Intelligence Ashfield Church The Sydney Morning Herald 9 September 1840 p 2 Retrieved 6 September 2010 Domestic Intelligence Ashfield Church The Sydney Morning Herald 16 September 1840 p 3 Retrieved 6 September 2010 Domestic Intelligence The Church of England The Sydney Morning Herald 25 November 1841 p 2 Retrieved 6 September 2010 News from the Interior Windsor The Sydney Morning Herald 17 May 1843 p 2 Retrieved 9 September 2010 Domestic Intelligence Diocese of Australia The Sydney Morning Herald 6 April 1844 p 2 Retrieved 6 September 2010 a b Domestic Intelligence Consecration of a Church The Sydney Morning Herald 20 August 1845 p 3 Retrieved 6 September 2010 a b c Enlargement of St John the Baptist s Church Ashfield The Sydney Morning Herald 26 October 1874 p 4 Retrieved 8 September 2010 a b St John s Ashfield Memorial Tower and Bells Dedicated The Sydney Morning Herald 2 November 1901 p 12 Retrieved 8 September 2010 Proposed Memorial of the Late Canon Corlette D D The Sydney Morning Herald 29 November 1900 p 8 Retrieved 8 September 2010 The Churches Corlette Memorial Bells The Sydney Morning Herald 5 September 1904 p 5 Retrieved 7 September 2010 a b c d St John s Ashfield Sydneyorgan com Retrieved 7 September 2010 St John s Church Ashfield The Sydney Morning Herald 7 July 1884 p 6 Retrieved 27 September 2010 Religious The Sydney Morning Herald 9 July 1884 p 11 Parker John W Published in OHTA News October 2009 pp20 4 Organ Historical Trust of Australia a b c Noake Keith 1951 Organs of St John s Ashfield Sydney Musical Opinion 74 887 601 603 St John s Ashfield The Sydney Morning Herald 2 September 1898 p 6 Retrieved 27 September 2010 Church Choir Festival The Sydney Morning Herald 1 December 1892 p 8 Retrieved 27 September 2010 a b c St John s Church Ashfield New Parochial Hall The Sydney Morning Herald 4 February 1895 p 6 Retrieved 17 September 2010 Church News St John s C E Ashfield The Sydney Morning Herald 16 April 1895 p 3 Retrieved 27 September 2010 On the Land New Rectory St John s Ashfield The Sydney Morning Herald 14 August 1922 p 7 Retrieved 6 September 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Francis Joan October 1989 Survey of St John s Cemetery Ashfield THE CHURCHES The Sydney Morning Herald 25 June 1927 p 8 Retrieved 26 May 2011 a b c Historic Churchyard St John s Ashfield Dedicated by Archbishop Mowll The Sydney Morning Herald 10 September 1934 p 6 Retrieved 9 September 2010 Memorials to War Dead Duke Opens Park The Sydney Morning Herald 28 October 1946 p 4 Retrieved 14 September 2010 Family Notices On Active Service The Sydney Morning Herald 16 May 1946 p 16 Retrieved 27 September 2010 G Odlum 1 July 2011 Annual Memorial Church Parade PDF Australian Air Force Cadets Retrieved 22 August 2011 Ashfield s new spot to play The Inner West Courier 9 June 2011 p 15 Retrieved 10 June 2011 a b Farewell to the Rev Dr Corlette The Sydney Morning Herald 27 September 1889 p 4 Retrieved 13 September 2010 a b Ashfield Auxiliary to the Church Society The Sydney Morning Herald 18 January 1865 p 5 Retrieved 13 September 2010 Stone Lucy 1994 Strathfield History St Thomas Anglican Church Enfield Strathfield District Historical Society Retrieved 9 September 2010 a b St John s Church Ashfield Rectors of the Parish wall plaque a b Penny Frank 1904 The church in Madras being the history of the ecclesiastical and missionary action of the East India Company in the Presidency of Madras in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries Vol 3 London Smith Elder p 362 Domestic Intelligence Ordination The Sydney Morning Herald 18 December 1837 p 2 Retrieved 8 September 2010 Newsletter 414 Rev William Stone and Mrs Susan Stone nee Johnson PDF Berrima District Historical amp Family History Society Inc February 2010 Retrieved 15 September 2010 Religious Establishments The Sydney Morning Herald 22 August 1842 p 2 Retrieved 14 September 2010 Church of England The Sydney Morning Herald 24 March 1843 p 2 Retrieved 12 September 2010 New Church The Sydney Morning Herald 27 July 1843 p 2 Retrieved 7 September 2010 Church at Balmain The Sydney Morning Herald 29 July 1843 p 2 Retrieved 11 September 2010 Sydney Diocesan Society The Sydney Morning Herald 29 March 1855 p 4 Retrieved 11 September 2010 Lumsdaine James Robert 1993 James Robert Lumsdaine papers 1830 1993 concerning William Lumsdaine and Picton N S W Library of NSW Retrieved 27 September 2010 The Late Rev William Lumsdaine The Sydney Morning Herald 11 April 1902 p 4 Retrieved 9 September 2010 Deaths The Sydney Morning Herald 5 August 1863 p 1 Retrieved 9 September 2010 Synod of the Diocese of Sydney The Sydney Morning Herald 21 August 1867 p 5 Retrieved 14 September 2010 Freer Alan The William the Conqueror Database The Late Canon Corlette Service at St John s Ashfield The Sydney Morning Herald 19 November 1900 p 8 Retrieved 7 September 2010 Greville P J 1981 Corlette James Montagu Christian 1880 1969 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 8 Melbourne University Press pp 116 117 Retrieved 27 September 2010 Death of Canon Corlette D D The Sydney Morning Herald 13 November 1900 p 5 Retrieved 17 May 2011 Church News Church of England The Sydney Morning Herald 9 March 1901 p 7 Retrieved 7 September 2010 St John s Ashfield The Sydney Morning Herald 22 February 1901 p 6 Retrieved 27 September 2010 Obituary Rev Alfred Yarnold The Sydney Morning Herald 16 November 1927 p 12 Retrieved 7 September 2010 a b Mckenna Mark October 2012 An Eye For Eternity The Life of Manning Clark New Canon Rev W G Hilliard Elected The Sydney Morning Herald 21 July 1932 p 8 Retrieved 7 September 2010 Personal The Argus Melbourne Victoria 15 December 1933 p 6 Retrieved 27 September 2010 St John s Ashfield The Sydney Morning Herald 13 April 1927 p 22 Retrieved 8 September 2010 Obituary Rev A A Yeates The Sydney Morning Herald 6 July 1931 p 5 Retrieved 15 September 2010 New Rector of Ashfield Rev H S Cocks Appointed The Sydney Morning Herald 5 December 1931 p 5 Retrieved 7 September 2010 a b Inducation at Ashfield The Sydney Morning Herald 10 August 1939 p 4 Retrieved 7 September 2010 St John s Ashfield The Sydney Morning Herald 5 June 1939 p 13 Retrieved 8 September 2010 The Churches Attracting Young People Rev L N Sutton s View The Sydney Morning Herald 17 June 1939 p 11 Retrieved 13 September 2010 Ordination Service At St Andrew s The Sydney Morning Herald 20 December 1930 p 16 Retrieved 17 September 2010 The Churches The Sydney Morning Herald 26 November 1949 p 11 Retrieved 8 September 2010 The Churches The Sydney Morning Herald 24 June 1950 p 13 Retrieved 8 September 2010 Parish Rectors St Luke s Anglican Church Mosman Retrieved 14 September 2010 Helensburgh Anglican Church Helensburgh and District Historical Society Retrieved 14 September 2010 Staff Christ Church Inner West Retrieved 17 September 2010 a b Smith Joseph 27 February 2007 MOCHA makes mums most welcome Southern Cross The Anglican Diocese of Sydney ISSN 1445 0089 a b St John s Church Ashfield Assistant Clergy of the Parish wall plaque History Leaflet PDF St Peter s Cathedral Armidale Retrieved 20 September 2010 News of the day The Sydney Morning Herald 9 July 1889 p 7 Retrieved 17 September 2010 Gugler Ann 2010 Chapter 7 John Price PDF Retrieved 17 September 2010 Rev R W P Montgomery The Sydney Morning Herald 1 July 1936 p 11 Retrieved 17 September 2010 The Churches The Sydney Morning Herald 30 June 1928 p 9 Retrieved 13 September 2010 The Churches The Sydney Morning Herald 29 April 1939 p 4 Retrieved 13 September 2010 About Us St Jude s Anglican Church Randwick Retrieved 3 January 2019 Pratten Chris ed 2001 Ashfield at Federation Ashfield and District Historical Society Inc p 308 ISBN 0 949842 12 5 First Fleeter Gravesite Plaque Ceremonies 1976 2009 Fellowship of First Fleeters 2009 Retrieved 9 September 2010 Where so little has happened and so much The Australian Women s Weekly National Library of Australia 8 December 1965 p 13 Retrieved 26 May 2011 Godden Mackay Pty Ltd Richard Mackay Robert Irving Chris Pratten Jill Sheppard Stephen Harris 1 March 1992 Ashfield Heritage Study Infant s Home Ashfield The Louise Taplin Ward Building PDF Ashfield Municipal Council Retrieved 23 September 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Dickey Brian 1972 Halloran Henry 1811 1893 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 4 Melbourne University Press p 327 NEWS OF THE DAY The Sydney Morning Herald National Library of Australia 6 September 1886 p 7 Retrieved 23 May 2013 Blaxell Gregory 15 February 2011 Yaralla empty and forlorn Northern District Times Retrieved 15 February 2011 Walsh G P 1976 Terry Samuel Henry 1833 1887 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 6 Melbourne University Press pp 258 259 Want Richard 1976 Want Randolph John 1811 1869 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 6 National Centre of Biography Australian National University Retrieved 3 August 2011 Kingston Beverley 2005 Wrench Edward Thomas Jones 1828 1893 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University Retrieved 3 August 2011 Ryan Donna Phillips 1988 Schauer Amy 1871 1956 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 11 National Centre of Biography Australian National University Retrieved 3 August 2011 Smith Joseph 28 December 2007 New Year New Parish Southern Cross The Anglican Diocese of Sydney ISSN 1445 0089 Worshipping together Christ Church Inner West Retrieved 17 September 2010 Brady Fiona 20 January 2010 Zombie flicks no grave affair for Ashfield Inner West Courier Retrieved 7 September 2010 Morris Linda 23 July 2010 Ghosts of horror movies past return to haunt cemetery cinema goers The Sydney Morning Herald p 3 Retrieved 6 September 2010 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to St John the Baptist s Anglican Church Ashfield St John s Ashfield home page CCIW home page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St John 27s Ashfield amp oldid 1212286761, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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